From: "Sandeep Vaidya (LMI)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

STOP NATO: �NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK


250 Million Silenced in UN Discrimination Conference

For more information please contact 079 470 1748

Mumbai: Teesta Setalvad, 022-660288/6603927

May 30, 2001 (Geneva) -- NGO members of the Caste and Asia-Pacific Caucuses
for the World Conference Against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia
and Related Intolerance (WCAR) today charged the Indian government with
sabotaging efforts to address caste-based discrimination at the U.N. meet.
Caste-based discrimination, affecting at least 250 million people worldwide,
is the only issue to have been systematically excluded from the
intergovernmental preparatory processes for the conference so far. The World
Conference Against Racism will take place in South Africa from August 31 to
September 7, 2001. 
In several South Asian countries, Dalits or so-called untouchables may not
cross the line dividing their part of the village from that occupied by
higher castes. They may not use the same wells, visit the same temples and
churches, drink from the same cups in tea stalls, or lay claim to land that
is legally theirs. Dalit children are frequently made to sit in the back of
classrooms, and communities as a whole are made to perform degrading rituals
in the name of caste. Dalit women are frequent victims of sexual abuse.
Dalits are routinely abused, even killed, at the hands of upper castes that
enjoy the state's protection. Caste-based abuses are also prevalent in Japan
and parts of Africa.
"The Indian government does not enjoy consensus support within the country
to deny the inclusion of such a major issue at this conference," said Indian
Member of Parliament Praveen Rashtrapal, currently attending the second
preparatory committee meeting (Prepcomm) for the conference in Geneva. "A
single government should not be able to stand in the way of addressing an
issue that affects so many people in so many parts of the world."
The Indian government also drew fire from members of the International Dalit
Solidarity Network (IDSN) - a network of concerned NGOs, development
agencies and international and grassroots human rights organizations - for
sending alleged NGO members, who had clearly received a government brief, to
disrupt conference activities and argue the government's side. India has
also pressured other governments into silence, dominated drafting committees
and working groups responsible for the language of the draft declaration and
programme of action, and pursuing its official position on caste without
parliamentary consultation.
"Despite the assertion of treaty bodies that caste discrimination falls
squarely within the mandate of the WCAR, not a single mention of the word
caste or Dalit appears in any of the government documents to date," said
Paul Divakar, Advocacy Director for the (Indian) National Campaign for Dalit
Human Rights. "Although South Africa's apartheid was effectively challenged
by the international community, Asia's 'hidden apartheid' continues to
condemn Dalits or "untouchables" to a lifetime of slavery, segregation,
exploitation, and violence. Its place in international consciousness is long
overdue." 
Non-governmental organizations have also been sidelined along with the caste
issue. Despite consistent reiteration of the need for transparency and
accountability, NGOs have had little space for interventions during the
drafting process. This has served only to marginalize the civil society
representatives now present in Geneva, many of whom have come from great
distances and at great personal expense.



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